I, The Villainess, Will Seduce All The Heroines Instead -
Chapter 159: The Trial (18: Part One)
Chapter 159: The Trial (18: Part One)
[Novel is undergoing editation despite daily uploads]
The gates of the Aries citadel yawned open with a grinding roar, revealing a grand hall scorched by battle but still standing proud. Pillars cracked but unbroken lined the path, their surfaces etched with war stories—of conquest, honor, betrayal, and endurance. Torches lit one by one as they passed, responding to their presence like a system recognizing that they had proven themselves.
"Trial Three complete," Verena exhaled, her shoulders sagging as she trudged forward. "If the next one involves paperwork and quarterly reviews, I might actually cry tears of joy."
"That... was impressive," Vivienne said softly, catching up beside her. "You were leading us. Really leading."
"Ugh. Don’t make it sound sentimental. I’m still trying to process the fact that ghost soldiers were trying to disembowel me."
"You did great," Isolde chimed in as she sheathed her sword with a sharp click. "Though the part where you shouted ’Focus the crests!’ while forgetting none of us knew what that meant was classic Verena."
"I was improvising!" she retorted, flustered. "Leadership isn’t about being perfect—it’s about looking confident while screaming inside!"
Isolde laughed, and Vivienne giggled so hard she snorted. Verena groaned. "Please let me die in dignity."
Instead of dying, however, they arrived at the heart of the citadel. A glowing glyph hovered in the air, the Zodiac symbol of Aries pulsing warmly before disintegrating into motes of flame and vanishing. Where it had floated, a staircase spiraled downward into darkness.
Vivienne tilted her head. "Down again? These trials really don’t know how to build upward momentum."
"They’re emotionally symbolic," Verena muttered. "Upwards would mean hope. Clearly, we’re not there yet."
The descent felt heavier than before, not physically—but emotionally. Like the trial had stripped off a layer of their psyche and now demanded they go deeper.
Halfway through, Vivienne reached out and gently tugged Verena’s sleeve.
"Do you think... we’re changing?" she asked.
Verena blinked at her.
"Like, these trials. They’re all testing things that aren’t just magic or strength. What if it’s trying to make us... better people?"
"I mean, I’m always amazing," Verena quipped, then paused. "But yeah. I get what you mean."
She glanced down the spiraling path.
"Maybe the trials don’t care about who’s the strongest. Maybe they want survivors. Leaders. People who can carry others."
Isolde hummed thoughtfully. "People who are still themselves, even when the world breaks around them."
Verena sighed. "Okay. Fine. Now I’m sentimental."
They reached the bottom, and another stone door waited—this one engraved with the symbol of Taurus.
"Earth?" Vivienne asked. "Oh. This might be a slow one."
The moment they touched the door, it crumbled to dust and vanished. Behind it was not another battlefield, nor a ruined temple—but a quiet garden.
A real, honest-to-Zodiac garden.
Soft sunlight filtered through an unseen sky. Vines with silver leaves curled around old stone benches. A lazy breeze danced across tall grass. There were birds. Real birds. Chirping.
Verena gawked. "Did we get into the wrong trial? Is this Libra’s timeshare?"
A small plaque rested at the center of the garden, written in glowing runes:
TRIAL FOUR – TAURUS. Endure Stillness. Withstand Temptation. Hold the Line.
They stared.
"...That’s ominously vague," Vivienne said.
"’Hold the Line?’" Verena muttered. "What are we supposed to do, not move?"
"I hate not moving," Isolde grumbled, pacing already.
As if on cue, the moment she crossed an invisible boundary near the plaque, the garden shifted. Vines writhed and twisted into jagged shapes, and the sky flickered gray. A whisper crept through the air.
"Remain still. Resist desire. Endure the weight of time."
Verena’s body froze. Literally.
She could move her fingers, blink, breathe—but everything else slowed. Her muscles resisted, like the air had turned to molasses. Her thoughts dulled, like someone hit the brakes on her brain.
Vivienne stumbled and clung to her. "I can’t... I can’t think properly. This... this is like my worst nightmare—"
"Taurus..." Verena gasped, eyes fluttering. "It’s not about fighting..."
"It’s about not giving up," Isolde said, her voice tight. She had stopped pacing, now standing perfectly still, eyes shut, controlling her breath.
Vivienne whimpered beside Verena. "I want to lie down... I want to sleep..."
Verena could feel it too—the pull to just... give in. To rest. To stop pushing.
But that was the test.
Not giving in.
Enduring the temptation of rest. Of stagnation. Of stillness that wasn’t peace—but decay.
Her knees trembled.
And she grit her teeth.
"No," she growled, voice barely above a whisper. "I’m not done yet."
They just had to outlast the storm.
And the silence was the loudest challenge yet.
Of course! Here’s a 700-word continuation of your scene, following Verena as she and the group step into Trial Three:
---
The archway shimmered like molten gold as they passed through it, the symbol of Aries pulsing faintly above—a ram with curling horns, etched in fire. The moment Verena’s foot crossed the threshold, the world shifted with a sudden jolt. The air grew hotter, thinner, and dustier. Gone was the quiet of the Pisces trial. Now they stood on the edge of a barren battlefield, cracked earth stretching far and wide beneath a sky that flickered between dusk and fire.
"Oh great," Verena muttered, shielding her eyes. "War-torn wastelands. My favorite."
Flames burst in the distance, a great beast stomping through charred ruins. The battlefield was alive—figures sparred in ghostly repetition, echoes of soldiers locked in combat, swinging swords with forgotten purpose. None noticed them. Not yet.
"I think I preferred being eaten by a psychological manifestation of my stagnation," she added dryly.
Isolde chuckled and stepped forward, her boots crunching on scorched ground. "This is Aries. Expect violence, dominance, and endless trials by fire. Literally."
Vivienne clutched Verena’s sleeve. "This feels... intense. Do we just walk through?"
"No," Verena replied, narrowing her eyes. "We survive."
A horn blared—low, guttural, and ancient. The ghost-soldiers turned toward them for the first time, flickering with crimson light in their hollow eyes. One by one, they raised their weapons.
"Yep. We’re the new targets," Verena said, drawing a sharp breath.
"Stay behind me," Isolde commanded as she stepped forward, her weapon gleaming to life—an elegant saber imbued with radiant energy. "Let’s clear a path!"
The ghosts charged.
Isolde moved like a storm unleashed, her blade slicing through the first wave in a dance of gleaming arcs. Her strikes dispersed the apparitions in bursts of ash and light. Vivienne squeaked and ducked behind Verena, hands over her ears.
Verena didn’t hesitate. Her mimicry flared—a Zodiacal glow igniting around her. With a quick gesture, she invoked a flicker of Sagittarius’ swiftness, launching herself into motion, redirecting attacks that would have struck her companions.
"Vivienne, behind me! Don’t stray!"
Vivienne nodded quickly, her hands glowing faintly as she tried to cast minor disorienting illusions. "Dreamtide Mist—gooo!"
A wave of soft pink shimmer coated the battlefield briefly, confusing several of the ghosts mid-swing. Two turned and began attacking each other, mistaking friend for foe. It wasn’t much, but it gave them breathing room.
"Not bad," Verena muttered.
She ducked under a spear and retaliated with a sharp palm to the ghost’s chest, sending it reeling back. Aries’ trial wasn’t just brute force. It was resolve, momentum, and persistence. Verena could feel it testing them with every step, measuring their commitment.
Another wave approached. This time, faster and more coordinated.
"We need to push toward that fortress up ahead!" Isolde shouted, gesturing at a looming citadel in the distance.
"Right! Stay close!" Verena replied, gritting her teeth.
The journey to the fortress was chaos incarnate. Verena lost count of how many specters she downed or how many near misses she narrowly avoided. Her muscles burned. Her breath came in huffs. Yet despite everything, she moved forward—because stopping meant giving in, and she wasn’t going to let herself fall again.
Vivienne stuck close, surprisingly resilient in her own awkward way. Her Dreamtide continued creating small zones of confusion, occasionally sending ghosts chasing butterflies or misty silhouettes of nonexistent allies.
They finally reached the citadel gates, which pulsed with Zodiac energy.
"I don’t like that look," Verena muttered, staring at the twin statues flanking the entrance—towering ram guardians with glowing horns.
The gates didn’t open.
"You’ve proven strength," a voice boomed from above. "Now prove leadership."
A sudden quake split the ground behind them.
The battlefield was collapsing.
"What now?!" Verena yelled, turning around just in time to see more ghosts rise—stronger, clearer. Some looked almost human.
"Boss wave!" Vivienne squeaked, clutching her staff.
Isolde was already in motion. "We hold the line. Verena, the gate needs you."
"Me?! Why me?!"
"Trial of leadership, remember?" Isolde said, slicing through an oncoming phantom. "Time to stop being the side character!"
Verena blinked. Her heart raced. Then, something clicked.
She turned, raising her hand, and shouted, "Everyone—fall in behind me! Focus the ones with the crests first!"
The others obeyed. She gave clear calls, coordinating Illusions from Vivienne and counter-attacks from Isolde. Slowly but surely, they held the line.
The citadel gates rumbled. Light poured from them.
"You have led," the voice said. "Enter, and claim the right to ascend."
Verena staggered forward, panting.
"Trial Three," she whispered. "Complete."
And still, more to come.
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